Mitty

noun: An ordinary, timid person who indulges in daydreams involving great adventures and triumphs.

ETYMOLOGY:

After the title character in The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, a short story
(1939) by James Thurber, later made into a movie (1947) of the same name.

NOTES:

James Thurber's story appeared in the March 18, 1939 issue of the
New Yorker. In the story, Walter Mitty is a meek husband, rather uxorious,
who fantasizes of great exploits to escape the humdrum of daily life. One
minute he is dreaming of being a heroic pilot ("Throw on the power lights!
Rev her up to 8500!"), next minute he becomes a daring naval commander.
In his next thought he transforms into a master surgeon, and even a cool
killer.

USAGE:

"It was not a Mitty dream. It was no fantasy at all."
Richard Bach; A Gift of Wings; Dell; 1974.

You can't do anything with anybody's body to make it dirty to me. Six people, eight people, one person -- you can do only one thing to make it dirty: kill it. Hiroshima was dirty. -Lenny Bruce, comedian and social critic (1925-1966)